91 School of Law Announces Sixth Dean

A nationally recognized scholar and educational leader, Dean-Designate Gregory W. Bowman vows to “build an even brighter future for legal education in Rhode Island”

By Michael M. Bowden, Esq.
Gregory Bowman will join us as the next dean of 91 Law on July 1.

BRISTOL, R.I. – The Roger Williams University School of Law Board of Directors on Monday announced that Gregory W. Bowman, a nationally recognized scholar who has been serving as dean of the highly regarded West Virginia University College of Law, will become 91 Law’s sixth dean, effective July 1, 2020.

“On behalf of the Board of Directors, I am thrilled to have Dean Bowman joining the law school,” saidthe Honorable William E. Smith, chairman of the board. “Dean Bowman brings broad experience as a successful law school dean at West Virginia University as well as a solid reputation as a national leader in legal education that will serve us well as we enter our next 25 years.  I have no doubt that Dean Bowman will be a terrific asset to the law school, the University, and to the entire Rhode Island legal community.”

Bowman expressed enthusiasm about the appointment. “I am really excited and honored to be joining the 91 community,” he said. “91 Law does a wonderful job of serving the public and training the lawyers and leaders of tomorrow, and it makes such a difference in people’s lives. I’m looking forward to working with everyone at 91 to build an even brighter future for legal education in Rhode Island.”

Roger Williams University President Ioannis Miaoulis said Bowman is an excellent fit to lead Rhode Island’s only law school. “Gregory Bowman exemplifies the innovation and vision necessary to adapt to the changing legal landscape that are the hallmarks of 91 Law,” Miaoulis said. “As the next dean, Greg will continue to advance the law school’s mission of educating practice-ready lawyers and serving the area’s neediest populations, strengthening its reputation regionally and nationally.”

Current 91 Law Dean Michael J. Yelnosky, who will return to teaching at the law school at the end of this academic year, agreed that Bowman’s impressive track record demonstrates tremendous potential to carry the institution forward.

“I am delighted that Dean Bowman has chosen to bring his considerable talents to help us write the next chapter of the 91 Law story,” Yelnosky said. “He is a proven leader, teacher, and scholar, and he is well-acquainted with the challenges and opportunities of the current legal education landscape, and with the rapid changes taking place in law practice.”


Yelnosky added that Bowman’s past experience will serve him well in the Ocean State. “He knows what it is like to be the leader of a state’s only law school,” Yelnosky said. “During his time at WVU, he helped launch new programs and expanded the law school’s reach into Switzerland, Russia, Uganda, and Mexico. Frankly, it is hard to imagine a more qualified candidate to become our next dean. I welcome him and look forward to assisting him in any way I can.”

A native of West Virginia, Bowman became the William J. Maier, Jr. Dean of the WVU College of Law in 2015 after serving for a year as Interim Dean at the school. Prior to that he served as the college’s Associate Dean of Academic Affairs. A widely published, nationally recognized scholar on international trade law and legal education, he first joined the faculty in 2009. Earlier, he taught at Mississippi College School of Law and the University of Mississippi School of Law.

In a 2019 article in the Toledo Law Review, titled, “The Rise of the Creative Law School,” Bowman set out an ambitious vision to help ensure that legal education – and the legal profession – remain relevant and responsive in the 21st century.

Bowman wrote: “If the practice of law is changing rapidly (it is), and the perspective of prospective students on the value of law school is changing (it is), and career prospects are no longer automatically seen as a safe return on investment for the cost of law school (they are not), and the market place of the future needs lawyers who have greater career flexibility and stronger soft skills (it will, and in fact already does), then law schools need to adapt to these changes, and they need to adapt now.”

Bowman concluded: “Not adapting puts the entire enterprise of legal education at risk – and thus places our democratic society and ideals at risk. And so we must innovate in the face of uncertainty.” Yet, “if we can dare to be aspirational, even in an age of financial challenges – then the future of American legal education will be bright.”

Bowman is a graduate of WVU, where he earned his B.A. in International Studies and Economics, summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. He also studied in Denmark as a Rotary Exchange Student and received his master’s degree in Economics with distinction from the University of Exeter, England, before receiving his J.D. cum laude from the Northwestern University School of Law.

Bowman received the Award for Outstanding Teaching from the WVU Foundation in 2014, and he was named “Professor of the Year” in 2011 by WVU Law students. He is the founding director of the College of Law’s Geneva Study Abroad Program. Prior to his teaching career, Bowman practiced law in Chicago and Washington, D.C. with the international law firm of Baker McKenzie.

Dean Bowman was selected after a national search led by Storbeck Search & Associates, a national search firm focused on higher education and nonprofit organizations.